A study of women's representation in relation to poverty: a case study of The Post March 2009
- Gwanvalla, Delphine Ngehndab
- Authors: Gwanvalla, Delphine Ngehndab
- Date: 2013
- Subjects: Journalism, Commercial -- Social aspects -- Cameroon Women -- Cameroon -- Social conditions Poor women -- Cameroon Mass media and women -- Cameroon
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:3504 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007144
- Description: The media, specifically tabloids, have the potential to portray poverty-related issues in a manner that informs the public and government about the experiences of people living in poverty so that it can be tackled with urgency. Poverty has blighted the lives of many, especially women, children and widows in Cameroon. The role of the media in reporting the plight and suffering of the ‘masses’ potentially shapes the way in which these issues are handled by those in authority. The study notes that the tabloid press has the potential to expose certain experiences of ordinary people thereby constituting that alternative sphere for the disadvantaged. The study investigates the manner women are represented in The Post which is an English tabloid published in Cameroon. The representation of women in this study looks at the institutional policies which drive the representation of women in news constructs, analyses the news values which shape news production, and uses Thompson’s modes of ideology to unravel the underlying meanings in the reported stories. The study is inspired by the claims that since women make up the majority of the world's poor, so too would media representations depict them as such. It utilises thematic analysis to understand the manner in which women are represented in The Post. It also uses interviews with the regional bureau editor of the North West region to probe what news values and institutional policies drive the stories on women’s poverty. Document analysis is used to better comprehend the institutional guidelines which govern the representation of women during the month of March 2009.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2013
- Authors: Gwanvalla, Delphine Ngehndab
- Date: 2013
- Subjects: Journalism, Commercial -- Social aspects -- Cameroon Women -- Cameroon -- Social conditions Poor women -- Cameroon Mass media and women -- Cameroon
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:3504 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007144
- Description: The media, specifically tabloids, have the potential to portray poverty-related issues in a manner that informs the public and government about the experiences of people living in poverty so that it can be tackled with urgency. Poverty has blighted the lives of many, especially women, children and widows in Cameroon. The role of the media in reporting the plight and suffering of the ‘masses’ potentially shapes the way in which these issues are handled by those in authority. The study notes that the tabloid press has the potential to expose certain experiences of ordinary people thereby constituting that alternative sphere for the disadvantaged. The study investigates the manner women are represented in The Post which is an English tabloid published in Cameroon. The representation of women in this study looks at the institutional policies which drive the representation of women in news constructs, analyses the news values which shape news production, and uses Thompson’s modes of ideology to unravel the underlying meanings in the reported stories. The study is inspired by the claims that since women make up the majority of the world's poor, so too would media representations depict them as such. It utilises thematic analysis to understand the manner in which women are represented in The Post. It also uses interviews with the regional bureau editor of the North West region to probe what news values and institutional policies drive the stories on women’s poverty. Document analysis is used to better comprehend the institutional guidelines which govern the representation of women during the month of March 2009.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2013
The diversity and distribution patterns of intertidal fish in the Agulhas bioregion
- Authors: Roux, Maryanne
- Date: 2013
- Subjects: Intertidal fishes , Marine fishes -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:10723 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1019712
- Description: This study aimed to expand the existing knowledge on the diversity and distribution patterns of intertidal fishes in the Sardinia Bay MPA and adjacent open access areas. It focussed particularly on in intertidal fish communities along the Agulhas Bioregion coast which has been understudied, especially in recent years. Typical resident species belonging to the family Clinidae were the most abundant, conforming to previous studies. Species from the family Gobiidae were the second most abundant in this study but this family was not previously recorded as being abundant. Transient species were unimportant in the current study which is in contrast to previous studies in the region and suggests a change in species composition. Certain transient species utilised intertidal rockpools as part of their nursery areas in the Eastern Cape, as has previously been found around Algoa Bay. A decrease in species richness from east to west was recorded in this study which has been noted by previous authors and the diversity and distribution patterns of the intertidal fish in the current study conformed to patterns found previously. The position of the biogeographic boundary between the Agulhas and Natal Bioregions could not be confirmed but Wavecrest (along the Transkei coastline) appeared to be part of a transition zone rather than a fixed break. More sampling around this area is recommended to determine the location and understand the dynamic nature of this boundary. The fish species were found to be vertically distributed across the shore with most of the resident species being more abundant across the low shore while the transient species were more abundant in the middle to low shore pools. This vertical distribution has been found at many sites around the world. The volume of the pools proved to be the primary controlling factor while the effect of temperature on vertical distribution could not be demonstrated. The benefits of the Sardinia Bay Marine Protected Area on this unexploited community of fishes could not be demonstrated but the long term benefit of protection has yet to be shown. Results from this study suggest that despite the correspondence with general biogeographic trends, the intertidal fish community has changed in composition (at least in terms of transient species) during the last 30 years and the cause for these changes may in part be reduced recruitment from exploited linefish.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2013
- Authors: Roux, Maryanne
- Date: 2013
- Subjects: Intertidal fishes , Marine fishes -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:10723 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1019712
- Description: This study aimed to expand the existing knowledge on the diversity and distribution patterns of intertidal fishes in the Sardinia Bay MPA and adjacent open access areas. It focussed particularly on in intertidal fish communities along the Agulhas Bioregion coast which has been understudied, especially in recent years. Typical resident species belonging to the family Clinidae were the most abundant, conforming to previous studies. Species from the family Gobiidae were the second most abundant in this study but this family was not previously recorded as being abundant. Transient species were unimportant in the current study which is in contrast to previous studies in the region and suggests a change in species composition. Certain transient species utilised intertidal rockpools as part of their nursery areas in the Eastern Cape, as has previously been found around Algoa Bay. A decrease in species richness from east to west was recorded in this study which has been noted by previous authors and the diversity and distribution patterns of the intertidal fish in the current study conformed to patterns found previously. The position of the biogeographic boundary between the Agulhas and Natal Bioregions could not be confirmed but Wavecrest (along the Transkei coastline) appeared to be part of a transition zone rather than a fixed break. More sampling around this area is recommended to determine the location and understand the dynamic nature of this boundary. The fish species were found to be vertically distributed across the shore with most of the resident species being more abundant across the low shore while the transient species were more abundant in the middle to low shore pools. This vertical distribution has been found at many sites around the world. The volume of the pools proved to be the primary controlling factor while the effect of temperature on vertical distribution could not be demonstrated. The benefits of the Sardinia Bay Marine Protected Area on this unexploited community of fishes could not be demonstrated but the long term benefit of protection has yet to be shown. Results from this study suggest that despite the correspondence with general biogeographic trends, the intertidal fish community has changed in composition (at least in terms of transient species) during the last 30 years and the cause for these changes may in part be reduced recruitment from exploited linefish.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2013
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